Rumor has it that Justice Scalia, deeply disappointed about not even being considered for the job of Chief Justice, has been more disengaged from life at the Court ever since. Well, if Nino is dissatisfied with life inside the marble palace, maybe he should think about hitting the stand-up comedy circuit.

According to this NYT article by Adam Liptak, a fascinating and fabulous study by BU Law School Professor Jay D. Wexler has scientifically determined that Justice Scalia is the funniest Supreme Court justice. As noted in the lede of Liptak's piece, Justice Scalia is "19 times as funny as Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg."

Breaking news: "Nino is much funnier than Ruthie." Gee, tell Article III Groupie something she doesn't already know! Guess this is what passes for news on a long holiday weekend. (Liptak's funny and well-written article has been hovering at or near the top of the Times's "Most E-mailed Articles" list since its publication.)**

Okay, in fairness to Liptak's excellent article and Professor Wexler's brilliant study (pdf), here are some more newsworthy tidbits:

1. RBG is physically capable of laughter. Wexler writes:

And, of course, it is widely believed that Justice Ginsburg doesn't even laugh herself, much less make others laugh. The notion that Justice Ginsburg does not laugh is mistaken. As one of Justice Ginsburg's clerks during the OT '98 Term, I can attest that she does, in fact, laugh. Maybe not often, perhaps not loudly or with great vigor and the wild waving of arms, but laugh she does.

(Prior to clerking for Justice Ginsburg, Professor Wexler served as a Tatel Tot and went to Stanford Law School.)

The New York Times, building on Professor Wexler's pioneering work, analyzed the available transcripts for the term that began this October. The mood under Chief Justice Roberts has brightened, the analysis found, with the average number of justice-generated laughs per argument rising to 2.9 from 2.6 the previous term.

In the current term, the Times analysis found, there has also been movement in the funniness-of-individual-justices department. Justice Breyer has taken the lead, at 28 laughs, edging out Justice Scalia, with 25. They also tied in the largest-number-of-jokes-in-a-single-argument category, each squeezing five into a single hour.

Chief Justice Roberts made a strong early showing, coming in third, with 13.

Professor Wexler explains his study in a short, very funny article in the unfailingly entertaining Green Bag. Check it out by clicking here (pdf). Enjoy!

* Actually, "The Seinfeld of One First Street" is already taken as a nickname. Here's a little known fact: Seinfeld once clerked for Justice Scalia!

No, not thatSeinfeld; Gil Seinfeld, a Harvard Law grad and no relation to Jerry (as far as A3G knows). As one would expect from a Guidomaniac, Gil is fairly liberal -- he was the token liberal or "counterclerk" in the Scalia chambers that Term. (N.B. Justice Scalia doesn't always adhere to the practice of hiring one liberal clerk; check out the comments to this PrawfsBlawg post. Of Justice Scalia's four current clerks, all are conservative.)

** Speaking of the NYT "Most E-mailed Articles" list, please feel free to e-mail this AP wire story to 20 of your closest friends. (The last line of the piece, however, requires a correction; if you're reading this post, you know that UTR no longer requires a password.)

Comments

Surely Scalia didn't really think he was a possibility for Chief Justice? Inasmuch as his ability to inspire laughter in an audience derives from his willingness to cut people down, he's about the worst possible candidate for CJ on the current Court. Deriding one's colleagues in one's opinions hardly indicates leadership potential, despite how entertaining and even deserved the insults were.

And while we're at it, at C-SPAN you can see Scalia at the Washington Correspondents' Dinner stealing material from Cedric the Entertainer.
Also, I don't think "laughter" is quite the word for the paroxisms of relief which occur when SBG arrives at the end of one of his interminable questions with its syntax intact.
Warren Burger used to complain that when the Chief Justice of England opened his mouth to speak, the room went silent, while he got no such respect. On the contrary, I have never heard a judge make a joke, no matter how badly told or how old or unfunny, without the assembled lawyers laughing like crazy. Only this could explain the laughs WHR received with comments like "Your time has expired even as we speak" or "You have 48 seconds remaining, but on the principle de minimis no curat lex, the case is submitted."

Welcome back!!
RBG can actually be heard laughing over at Oyez in (if I recall) Fitzgerald v. Racing Ass'n (if not, it's Price v. Vincent). It's typical lawyer -- Scalia notes that RBG probably never lost a case, and she laughs that yes she did, it was a tax case.